The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, December 9, 2013 - 7A TV REVIEW Willurban art rise from ashes? t Heidelberg Project paintings huge, the towering - all standing suffers from turbed in stark contra desecration that su repeated arson them. The art installme By PAIGE PFLEGER hosts a myriad of p DailyArts Writer that foster art in Detr Emerging Artist progrs Detroit's city motto, "We to host the works of hope for better things; it shall coming artists who ha rise from the ashes," has res- had work in a formal urrected its meaning with the setting, creating a spri recent string of arsons at the for their careers. Th urban art installment, The Hei- Adults of Heidelberg p delberg Project. is for 18-to 35-year-oI The 27-year-old project an interest in using art began in the McDougall-Hunt alyst for change, aimed neighborhood in Detroit's east creating professional side, which deteriorated after ment opportunities in the 1967 race riots. Artist Tyree growing art commun Guyton and his grandfather ACE2 program, or Ar took their devastated neigh- munity & Environmen borhood and turned it from cation program, aims urban decay to an art project gap in arts education at that functioned as equal parts Public Schools, all political protest and inspiration emphasizing the imp - breathing life and color into of community and th a small pocket of houses that ronment. The project i seemed to have died. evolving to meet the n Upon his return to Heidel- constantly changing ar berg Street, Guyton was con- The breadth of o fronted by rows of empty homes, that the Heidelberg abandoned and deteriorating. facilitates has been a w Natives avoided the area, which change to the commun was written off as unsafe, even has faced little backlas in the daytime. Guyton, a paint- dalism - until recently. er and sculptor, began to liven A rash of unsolved ar the houses with painted dots devastated the art ins of various colors, or by salvag- powerhouse - claimi ing items and attaching them to of the houses and burn the houses exteriors. Over time, structures to the grou with the help of neighborhood first occurred in May kids, these small acts of beau- arson at the OJ House. tification turned into a big one ond destroyed House - creating one of Detroit's most which was entirely co noteworthy attractions. records, on Nov 12. TI For those that stumble upon brought down Penny H the project accidentally, or Nov 21, and the fourth t those who are a part of the Room House on Thank 3,000 or so yearly visitors, Hei- day. delberg Street transports to a Regardless of the s fantasy world. The outdoor art desecration of an inte exhibitsprawls from house to ally recognized commu house, across painted streets ation, Guyton remains and sidewalks and over vacant In an official stateme lots. The colors are bright, the the second arson, those FILM REVIEW No coal for Fu holiday season By CONRAD FOREMAN Daily Arts Writer Right away with the opening scene, "Out of the Furnace" lets you know what kind of movie it is: one that unapologeti- A- cally portrays violence in its Out of the raw nature, Fume even making it hard to watch At Quality 16 at times. and Rave That being said, the core Relativity themes of responsibility, love and justice overpower the cringe-worthy They see me ridin dirty. aspectsto resultin apowerful film which uses violence to enhance its ling. One mistake (itself t legitimacy, rather than as a cheap of an attempt to help ploy. else) strips Bale of every Russell Baze (Christian Bale, has broken his back wor "The Dark Knight") has a pretty The only item of importa nice life, all things considered. He remains is his brother, an has a steady job in the steel mill shows the will to go to an and a loving relationship with a to protect him. beautiful woman (Zoe Saldana, "Avatar"). But he's also constantly cleaningup the messesmadebyhis Affleck poi brother, Rodney (Casey Affleck, "Gone Baby Gone"), who's strug- for Oscar n gling to make his way in life, psy- chologically scarred by multiple military tours in Iraq. A drunk- driving accident lands Russell in Director Scott Cooper jail, and upon his return home he Heart") excels in contras finds Rodney in greater debt and brothers' realities. Simu no closer to getting his life togeth- sequences of Russell hunt er. When Rodney's attempt to pay their uncle, and Rodney off his debt through an under- trating his deal with ground fighting ring entangles provide an artistic look in him with the vicious, merciless differing personalities at Harlan DeGroat (Woody Harrel- points. A similar scene son, "Zombieland"), Russell must working in the steel mill face the consequences of his own cooking meth, contrasti actions, as well as his brother's. sell's hard-working, rest The brothers' relationship is lifestyle to DeGroat's selfi the heart of the film, but Rus- ally questionable existenc sell's personal storyline carries Affleck's performanc the emotional weight that makes generated Oscar buzz, as "Out of the Furnace" so compel- fully should. His character ulptures ig undis- st to the rrounds nt also rograms oit. The am seeks up-and- ven't yet gallery ngboard e Young program ds with as a cat- I toward develop- Detroit's ity. The t, Com- tal Edu- to fill a I Detroit while ortance he envi- s always eeds of a t scene. fferings Project elcomed ity, and h or van- sons has tallment ng four ning the nd. The with the The sec- of Soul, vered by 'he third Souse on ook War ksgiving enseless rnation- nity cre- positive. nt after e at Hei- delberg directly addressed the perpetrator. "We want you to know that we understand your pain," the statement read. "We realize that all you've grown to know is destruction and that you see no way out. This is precisely why we are here. Our work is not about tangible 'things,' it is about the Power of the Human Spirit. We recognize that there is a fire in you and we are here not to extinguish it, but to offer you a better reason to fuel it. Though you have tried, you cannot destroy the Heidelberg Project; it's bigger than all of us now. Instead, we invite you to join our family in creating a better neighborhood, a better Detroit, if not for anyone else than for yourself." The message, however, was not well received by the arson- ist, who proceeded to burn down the last two houses. The community is upping volunteer patrols and police surveillance in hopes of protecting this com- munity pillar, as well as the residents in the area who are threatened by the fires. In lieu of the recent destruc- tion of the graffiti mecca, 5 Pointz, in Queens, New York, one cannot help but wonder what the future holds for urban art. The beautification of urban decay into nationally recog- nized art installments, no mat- ter how untraditional the art form, shouldn't be grounds for disembodiment. More destruc- tion cannot be the response to revival, or else all progress will be negated, as though taking one step forward and two steps back. Fulfilling Detroit's city motto, The Heidelberg Project guarantees that it will rise from the senseless ashes of the last month, proving yet again that Detroit's resilience can extin- guish even the strongest fires of adversity. NBC 'Mean people need Jesus.' Underwood overused in 'Sound of Music Live!' by ALEX INTNER Daily Arts Writer rnace' this NBC tried something that hadn't been done in 50 years last Thursday night: They aired a live broadcast of a musical C+ produced for TV. In a time TheSound of of declining Music Live! numbers, the broadcast Available for networks streaming have started to program NBC live-avents in order to bring in viewers. NBC's president Bob Greenblatt is a fan of musicals, so he decided to try a live presentation of "The Sound of Music." What resulted was three hours of television that contained a mix of success and failure: The musical itself caused some of the problems, but others came from decisions by the cre- ative team. The biggest mistake the pro- ducers made was casting Carrie Underwood ("Enchanted") as Maria Rainer. Underwood is best known as a country music super- star, not as an actress, and the producers took a huge risk cast- ing her in this role. Musically, it absolutely paid off. Underwood sings the hell out of the songs, especially her first number, "The Sound of Music." In the dialogue scenes, however, she truly fails to register as a character - seem- ing more focused on remember- ing her lines than crafting a well formed role. Even if Underwood barely reg- isters as an actress, the produc- ers surround her with Broadway and television veterans, enough so that they were at least able to make everything else bearable. The best performance in the show belongs to Audra McDon- ald ("Private Practice") as Moth- er Abbess. Her version of "Climb Sound of Music Live!" deserves Ev'ry Mountain" is the best credit for pulling off the very moment of the telecast and also difficult tasks that come along serves as the only time Under- with producing a live musical. wood shows any sort of acting They did a great job of moving ability in the telecast. the cameras around, and actually Laura Benanti ("Go On") and executing some complex camera Christian Borle ("Smash") are moves, all while never catching strong in supporting roles, both another camera onscreen. There perfectly cast as the Baroness are multiple transitions - like and Max, respectively. They one when Maria leaves the von embody their personalities with Trapp home and goes back to the finesse. Stephen Moyer ("True church through a wall on the set Blood") does a good job with an - that are fantastic theatrical extremely limited character; the moments. In addition, none of the role of the Captain doesn't allow actors fell, and always appeared him to show a huge amount of to make their marks. A lot of the emotion, so he does what he can. credit here goes to Beth McCar- His version of "Edelweiss" leaves thy-Miller ("30 Rock"), who something to be desired, lacking served as the television director some of the beauty that the song and created some great shots in could have portrayed. the production. Ultimately, the best thing about "The Sound of Music Live!" is the music. The singing Poor production numer O~r rO U ti~ numersfrom this show are fan- choices plague tastic and performed admirably. Even if the producer's decisions network's live caused problems, "The Sound of Music"isn't a perfect musical, telecast. and its script provides problems of its own. The majority of the dialogue scenes drag, mostly because they're not well writ- From a design perspective, the ten. The supporting actors do broadcast is a total and complete the best they can, but the book failure. The sets look like they scenes still tends to feel slow. were taken from a high school Despite these problems, "The production. They also happen Sound of Music" was a huge hit to be similar in color to the cos- for NBC. It may have miscast its tumes, causingsome of the actors lead and had a horrible design, to blend into the background. In but 18 million people tuned in addition, the lighting is awful, to the special. NBC took a huge with some of the scenes washed risk putting this on TV, and it out in a weird orange color or paid off. What this unconven- being so dark that it was tough tional move does, is it allows to make out the actor's faces. them. t, try this again. NBC has The sound too seems off at times, openec up a new possibility for with the orchestra drowning out television. Ultimately, that's why some of the actors during the this special will be remembered. songs, and a white noise present Not for Carrie Underwood's per- during some of the quieter dia- forniance, not for the horrific logue scenes. design, but for reinvigorating Despite these issues, "The the television musical. he result incredulity at his inability to ret- someone ognize his own flaws,but also gen- thing he erates sympathy: How can you not king for. feel sorry for a man who's put his ance that life on the line for his country (and d Russell experienced true horror in doing y lengths so), and in return, has received only permanent trauma? Affleck radiates toughness and internal turmoil to bring Rodney Baze to sed life. Woody Harrelson? He's just od. plain nasty. A woman-abusing, meth-cooking, line-crossing crea- ture of the New Jersey Appala- chians, Harrelson conveys every ("Crazy ounce of evil necessary to create a sting the repulsive villain. ltaneous The problems in the film are ting with few, most of them concerningspe- orches- cific character actions that aren't DeGroat completely inexplicable, only nto their questionable. nd view- The acting is superb, the & places directing is creative and, though I next to the story develops slowly, pow- ng Rus- erful emotion and strong the- ponsible matic presence help "Out of the ish, mor- Furnace" overcome any short- e. comings and leave viewers with ce has varying opinions about Russell's it right- character, and the justification of r garners his actions. HOME TWEET HOME @MICHIGANDAILY [ _--_--_--- _-- _--- _-- _-- _--- _-- _---_--_--_-- , Bring in this coupon for one FREE bagel! Featuring 20+ flavors including PUMPKIN! 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